UN: Trial for Bloody Crackdown Perpetrators
New York, Oct 28 2009 5:10PM
The Security Council today again called on Guinean authorities to charge and try the perpetrators of last month’s deadly crackdown on unarmed demonstrators that reportedly killed 150 people and wounded hundreds more, warning that situation might pose a risk to regional peace.
“The Security Council reiterates the
need for the national authorities to fight against impunity,
bring the perpetrators to justice, uphold the rule of law,
including the respect for basic human rights and release all
the individuals who are being denied due process under the
law,” the 15-member body said in a (
http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs//2009/sc9777.doc.htm)
presidential statement read by Ambassador Le Luong Minh of
Viet Nam, which holds this month’s
presidency.
Beyond the deaths and injuries that
resulted from the crackdown on 28 September in Conakry, the
capital, the statement cited “other blatant violations of
human rights including numerous rapes and sexual crimes
against women, as well as the arbitrary arrest of peaceful
demonstrators and opposition party leaders.”
The
Council endorsed efforts by the Economic Community of West
African States (ECOWAS) to resolve the crisis, particularly
its insistence on the establishment of a new transitional
authority to ensure credible, free and fair elections in
which Captain Moussa Dadis Camara and other coup leaders
would not be candidates.
Capt. Camara is head of the
National Council for Democracy and Development (NCDD), which
seized power in December in a coup d’état after the death
of then president Lansana Conté.
Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon will soon set up an international and
independent commission of inquiry into the crackdown
following its acceptance by local and regional stakeholders,
including Mr. Camara, who pledged full cooperation during a recent visit
from UN Assistant Secretary-General for Political Affairs
Haile
Menkerios.
ENDS